On these pages the People’s Tribune continues its monthly coverage of the many women leaders who are fighting in the interests of us all, for a society that cares for everyone. Call (800) 691-6888 or e-mail info@peoplestribune.org and we’ll send you copies of the paper to get out at the Women’s March. Also, please send photos and stories of your city’s march!
“It’s time to march again! On January 19, 2019, we’re going to flood the streets of Washington, D.C., and cities across the globe. The #WomensWave is coming, and we’re sweeping the world forward with us,” say march organizers. Women are at the “front of the resistance to the government, fighting to stop the assaults on our rights,” protesting “family separation actions at the U.S. border” and the “nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court,” among other efforts, organizers say.
The women’s marches, beginning with the first in 2017, have seen millions of participants fighting for women’s rights—and more. Signs illustrating participants’ urgent demands for healthcare for all, for an end to deportations and family separation at the border, for clean, affordable water and a safe environment, against gun violence and police killings, are in every march. Women are leading the fight for a society that represents us all.
Read the speech delivered by a student at the student walkout at MSU two days after the Presidential election. Thousands of students nationwide walked out to protest Donald Trump's election and his policies on the same day.
Thousands of groups and millions of people are beginning to reach out to one another to resist the Trump agenda. Regardless of who we voted for, we the people, have a common interest in seeing to it that all our families are well taken care of, that all children are well educated and have a future, and that we have a society free of climate disaster, racism, bigotry and inequality.
"Many Americans roused to action by their government’s complicity in Gaza’s destruction have no personal connection to Palestine or Israel. Their motive is not ethnic or religious. It is moral."
"[The student nationwide] walkouts represent a call to action for both parties," said Sunrise Youth Movement, a group that advocates for political action on climate change.